TY - BOOK AU - Calvo,Paco AU - Symons,John TI - The architecture of cognition: rethinking Fodor and Pylyshyn's systematicity challenge SN - 9780262322461 AV - BF311 PY - 2014///.] CY - Cambridge, MA PB - MIT Press KW - Fodor, Jerry A. KW - Pylyshyn, Zenon W., KW - Cognition KW - Human information processing KW - Connectionism KW - physiology KW - Cognitive Science KW - Mental Processes KW - Models, Neurological KW - Models, Psychological KW - PHILOSOPHY/Philosophy of Mind/General KW - COGNITIVE SCIENCES/General KW - Electronic Books N1 - 2; Preface --; I --; 1 Systematicity: An Overview --; 2 Can an ICS Architecture Meet the Systematicity and Productivity Challenges? --; 3 Tough Times to Be Talking Systematicity --; II --; 4 PDP and Symbol Manipulation: What's Been Learned Since 1986? --; 5 Systematicity in the Lexicon: On Having Your Cake and Eating It Too --; 6 Getting Real about Systematicity --; 7 Systematicity and the Need for Encapsulated Representations --; 8 How Limited Systematicity Emerges: A Computational Cognitive Neuroscience Approach --; 9 A Category Theory Explanation for Systematicity: Universal Constructions --; III --; 10 Systematicity and Architectural Pluralism --; 11 Systematicity Laws and Explanatory Structures in the Extended Mind --; 12 Systematicity and Conceptual Pluralism --; 13 Neo-Empiricism and the Structure of Thoughts --; IV --; 14 Systematicity and Interaction Dominance --; 15 From Systematicity to Interactive Regularities: Grounding Cognition at the Sensorimotor Level --; 16 The Emergence of Systematicity in Minimally Cognitive Agents --; 17 Order and Disorders in the Form of Thought: The Dynamics of Systematicity --; Contributors --; Index; 2; b N2 - In 1988, Jerry Fodor and Zenon Pylyshyn challenged connectionist theorists to explain the systematicity of cognition. In a highly influential critical analysis of connectionism, they argued that connectionist explanations, at best, can only inform us about details of the neural substrate; explanations at the cognitive level must be classical insofar as adult human cognition is essentially systematic. This volume reassesses Fodor and Pylyshyn's 'systematicity challenge' for a post-connectionist era, covering the most important recent developments in the systematicity debate UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=761198&site=eds-live&custid=s3260518 ER -